Employment

The three major employers of career physicists are academic institutions, government laboratories, and private industries, with the largest employer being the last.[2] Many people who are trained as physicists, however, apply their skills to other activities, in particular to engineering, computing, and finance, often quite successfully. Some physicists take up additional careers where their knowledge of physics can be combined with further training in other disciplines, such as patent law in industry or private practice. In the United States, a majority of those in the private sector having a physics degree actually work outside the fields of physics, astronomy and engineering altogether.[3]